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INTRODUCTION Morpho-Ecologies (ME) MORPHO combines Morphology and Morphogenesis, the first is about the study of forms in a biological sense, and the second is about the controlled spatial distribution of cells during an organism’s development. ME aims to “achieve
morphological complexity and performative capacity in material constituents without separating formation from materialization processes”.
ME seeks to accelerate the evolution of architectural environments so that ‘the relation of form and space to program, acknowledges the dynamic patterns of human habitation.’
ECOLOGIES refers to the “relationships between humans and their physical and social
environments”.
Embryological House. Gregg Lynn
The oneiric house as hermitage “To make their home in the world, that is, to build, human beings must gain more than physical control, they must establish spiritual control. To do so they must wrest order from what at first seems contingent, fleeting, and confusing, transforming chaos into cosmos.” Karsten Harries The hermit’s house is a space for solitude, imagination, and creativity where the daydreamer takes refuge and dreaming is sheltered
The oneiric house as stage The theatre is showcased on the stage where worlds are created and the realm of make believe is presented. The stage (like film and music) becomes a clear event highlighting movement | temporal progression | the senses | and the threshold of reality. Tschumi’s dictum: “there is no space without event”, has led to spatial consideration being given to time, action and movement in architecture. Architecture is perceived as space-influx and not as a fixed and enduring object.
Work by Theo Jansen
LIRA MOLAPO
Lira's album ‘Soul in Mind' serves as the seed, or initiator, in the development of a unique design process translating the private dreamspace into the public dreamstage through architectural structure and machinery.
Lira’s voice is an oneiric machine that carries the listener away from their daily struggles into a world filled with passion, longevity, and optimism.
RAUMLABOR SPACEBUSTER in NEW YORK
The body is transcended and the spirit freed.
Blur, Diller & Scofidio
Lira deals with her own challenges and spiritual development as a woman, however she communicates them in the public realm.
Uexkull argues that by basing ourselves in permanent immovable structures we have disrupted our experience of space. Deleuze is convinced that we no longer relate to these typological structures as contemporary human life no-longer caters for separate or distinct functions. Uexkull describes a new type of space where we have a series of existential encounters with our surroundings, which are unique for every organism. Looking at an individual’s experience of space provides the opportunity to make space much more personal, free from the associations of typological function or social manipulation.
carbon crystal sails at Swarovski Crystal Palace, Miami Exhibition.
Gregg Lynn
To actively engage the user, architecture needs to explore sensory stimulation, as well as the development of responsive systems, so that we can regain control of our environment.
Ame Raath 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
VonĂŠ Labuschagne 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Kathy Lee 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Rhonwen Baker 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Heinrich van Zyl 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Christine Meyer 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Valentino Moutzouris 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Derek Faure 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Hanmarie Stadler 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Johan Kok 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
The oneiric house as hermitage
“The house is a "metaphysical instrument, a mythical tool with which we try to introduce a reflection of eternity into our momentary existence." Juhani Pallasmaa
Daydream Machine, Projections of Mind, Zack Shirk
Johane KotzĂŠ 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
The oneiric house as hermitage It's "an instrument with which to confront the cosmos." Gaston Bachelard
Michael Zietsman 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Jonathan Harris 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Jolandi Henning 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
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Jolanie Scholtz 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Judith Hugo 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Cloudtower Grafenegg, the next ENTERprise
Kelvin Gibbs 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Leonore Cilliers 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Matthew Woolahan 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Liza Dreyer 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Lizeri Jacobs 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Lizl Heimst채dt 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Lourens Schoeman 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Mariska Peel 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Matchelle Botha 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Menan du Plessis 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Megan Niewoudt 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Michelle Purchase 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Michelle Mineur 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Pieter Slabbert 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Neil Terblanche 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Robyn Baxter 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Ricus Roux 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Sidne Larson 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Rochelle vd Walt 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Theo Gutter 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Simone Scheepers 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Willeen Gerryts 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
Other Space Odysseys, Greg Lynn, Michael Maltzan, Alessandro Poli
Wynand VIljoen 3rd Year Student Department of Architecture, UFS
The oneiric house as hermitage From private to public i. Perhaps we cannot be successful solitaries - though all of us are solitaries in the end. ii. In “Dialectics of Outside and Inside�, Bachelard says, being is all around us, not circumscribed. We are not the centre of being, nor is anything else, for that matter. iii. Hence there is neither being-here nor being-there. iv. Modern humanity goes from claustrophobia to agoraphobia.
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